Liming Ponds

Water is the lifeblood of every pond…every one. Clean, vibrant, healthy water yields healthy environments, which play significant roles in surrounding ecosystems.

Managing water quality is a key part of prudent pond management.

Just exactly what does that mean?

Remember that scientists call water the “universal solvent”. Anything that can dissolve into water, will. That means minerals, metals, acids, bases, tree leaves, cotton socks, parts of old cars…lots of different things can dissolve. When something dissolves into water, the chemistry, and often the quality, changes. Water has other amazing qualities, too. As some organic stuff dissolves, water composts it. Fertilizer coming off fields, organic matter washed in from near shore, waste from the creatures beneath the surface…water processes this stuff and releases as much of it as it can.

When water tilts toward the acid side of the pH scale, normally due to surrounding soils and plant life, corrective action is needed.

Liming.

You’ve heard of it.

Biologists recommend liming for ponds and lakes that reside in acidic areas. Typically, acidic water is surrounded by sandy soils and pine trees. Odds are, if your pasture soil needs lime, so does your pond.

Don’t just run down to the farm store, snag a bag of lime and toss it in the water.

There’s some science behind it.

I’ll always remember a story about a local golf course superintendent who got fired because he killed the greens on six holes of the course. His replacement, a brash guy, did the same thing. It took too long to figure out the water they were using to irrigate the greens had way too much lime in it. They had to dig up the old turf, replace much of the dirt and then change the way they watered the new grass. It was a tough lesson.

What about your pond? If the pH is in the low 6’s or lower, consider liming.

Do your due diligence. There are lots of different types of lime. There’s quicklime, hydrated lime, dolomitic lime, aglime…lime this, lime that. Each type has its purpose. You have a specific purpose.

Lime, in proper amounts, acts like Nature’s Rolaids. Lime dissolved into water buffers the wet stuff. Lime absorbs those acids, doing its part to stabilize your water chemistry. Stable water can take a lot of punches from nature. For example, just the simple, day to day biological activities of photosynthesis and respiration via aquatic plant life can send pH wildly up and down through the course of 24 hours. Lime, calcium carbonate, mitigates those changes, keeping pH within a safe range.

Biologists measure the amount of lime in your water at any given moment by checking the alkalinity. Alkalinity at least 20 parts per million is the benchmark to decide if, and how much, lime needs to be added. By the way, recommendations typically are made by “tons per acre”, based on what exists in your water.

Quantify, seek advice and then choose your liming path.

It’s a fairly simple, easy decision to make, given the proper knowledge and advice.

This entry was posted
on Wednesday, October 26th, 2016 at 1:42 pm and is filed under News & Updates.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
Responses are currently closed, but you can trackback from your own site.